How can you believe in Einstein's Theory of Relativity when it contradicts basic common sense, and fundamental laws of Physics?
Do you mean the Newtonian laws? Because Einsteins observations are more accurate than Newtons. And we know there are problems with Einstein--we just don't know exactly what. Someday, another great physicist will come along who will propose an understanding more accurate than Einstein's.
For instance the speed of light is a constant, so how can photons experience no time or distance? How can something just happen and yet supposedly happen at a different time for someone else? How can two twins ages change just because of travel? To me these are ridiculous ideas.
I am a long, long ways from being a physicist. Things like time dilation are really above my paygrade. But then, that's exactly why I depend on the consensus of the experts in this field. Just like I trust my surgeon to remove my appendix, or my mechanic to repair my car, I trust physicists to know their stuff.
I'll confess something else to you as well. I'm not a genius, and it is not uncommon for me that when I listen to two geniuses talk, it makes absolutely no sense to me. Part of it is that I simply lack the necessary background. But part of it is also that I don't always understand their logic. When this happens to me, I simply call to mind all the zillions of times that I've tried to engage others in a rational discussion, only to find that they cannot follow my very basic logic, inserting all sorts of irrelevancies and reaching conclusions that are sometimes even bizarre. I pretty quickly realize that they are simply incapable of following what I'm saying. In the same way, I can't always follow what geniuses say. But that doesn't mean they are wrong. It means that I'm more limited. It means that they think more clearly than I do.
So perhaps instead of being indignant that a physicist suggests something that runs contrary to your common sense, perhaps adopt an attitude of humility, that maybe what appears to you as common sense might actually be somewhat more complicated, but beyond your ability to understand.